Contribute to a 529 plan for tax-free growth and withdrawals for qualified education expenses. Many states offer a state income tax deduction for contributions.
Unused 529 funds can now be rolled to a Roth IRA (up to $35,000 lifetime, $7,000/year) — eliminating the "what if they don't go to college" concern.
Non-qualified withdrawals incur income tax plus a 10% penalty on earnings.
Give up to $19,000 per recipient per year ($38,000 for married couples gift-splitting) without using any lifetime exemption or filing a gift tax return.
A couple with 3 children and 6 grandchildren gives $38,000 to each (9 recipients) = $342,000 transferred tax-free per year, removing assets from the taxable estate.
Direct payments for tuition and medical expenses are unlimited and separate from the annual exclusion. Front-load 529 plans with 5 years of contributions ($90,000) at once.
A UNK client and his wife wanted to reduce their taxable estate without triggering gift tax. Uncle Kam implemented a systematic annual gifting program: each year, the couple gave $19,000 per child (the 2026 annual exclusion) to each of their three children and three spouses — $19,000 x 6 recipients x 2 donors = $228,000 per year. Over three years, they transferred $684,000 out of their estate completely tax-free, with no gift tax return required and no use of their lifetime exemption.
Want to reduce your taxable estate while you're alive? Annual gifting is the simplest strategy available. Book a call to build your gifting plan.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallThe annual gift tax exclusion is $19,000 per recipient in 2026 (indexed for inflation). You can give $19,000 to as many people as you want each year without filing a gift tax return or using any of your lifetime exemption. Married couples can combine their exclusions to give $38,000 per recipient per year through gift-splitting.
No — gifts within the annual exclusion ($19,000 per recipient in 2026) do not require a gift tax return (Form 709). However, if you make a gift that exceeds the annual exclusion to any one person, you must file Form 709 to report the excess, even if no gift tax is due (the excess reduces your lifetime exemption).
Yes — gifts above the annual exclusion reduce your lifetime gift and estate tax exemption (approximately $15 million+ per person in 2026, permanently doubled under the OBBBA). As long as your total lifetime taxable gifts (above annual exclusions) do not exceed the exemption, no gift tax is due. Only when cumulative taxable gifts exceed the lifetime exemption does gift tax apply at 40%.
Yes — the annual exclusion applies to gifts to any individual, including grandchildren. However, large gifts to grandchildren (or great-grandchildren) may also trigger the Generation-Skipping Transfer (GST) tax, which has its own exemption (approximately $15 million+ in 2026, permanently doubled under the OBBBA). Gifts within the annual exclusion are automatically exempt from GST tax.
Yes — you can elect to treat a lump-sum contribution to a 529 plan as if it were made ratably over 5 years, allowing you to contribute up to $95,000 per beneficiary ($190,000 for married couples) in a single year without gift tax consequences in 2026. This is called the "superfunding" election and must be reported on Form 709.
Set aside up to $5,000 per year in pre-tax dollars through an employer-sponsored Dependent Care FSA to pay for childcare, preschool, and after-school care.
Contributing $5,000 to a Dependent Care FSA saves $1,850 in federal taxes at a 37% rate, plus FICA taxes — total savings of $2,233.
Cannot be combined with the Child and Dependent Care Credit for the same expenses. The FSA is generally better for higher-income earners.
A UNK client and her husband both worked full-time and were paying $24,000/year in daycare costs for their two children. They had never enrolled in their employer's Dependent Care FSA during open enrollment. Uncle Kam walked them through the math: by contributing the $5,000 FSA maximum, they would save $1,530 in federal taxes (at 22% income tax + 7.65% FICA) on money they were already spending on childcare. The following year, both enrolled and redirected $5,000 of their childcare spending through the FSA.
Paying for daycare, after-school care, or summer camp? A Dependent Care FSA is free money. Book a call to make sure you're enrolled.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallA Dependent Care FSA (DCFSA) is an employer-sponsored benefit that lets you set aside pre-tax dollars to pay for qualifying dependent care expenses. The annual contribution limit is $5,000 per household ($2,500 if married filing separately). Contributions reduce your taxable income for federal income tax, Social Security tax, and Medicare tax — making the effective savings 22-37% depending on your tax bracket.
Qualifying expenses include daycare, preschool, after-school programs, summer day camps, and in-home care (nanny or au pair) for children under age 13. Care for a spouse or dependent who is physically or mentally incapable of self-care also qualifies. Overnight camps, tutoring, and kindergarten tuition do not qualify.
Yes, but not on the same expenses. The $5,000 FSA contribution reduces the expense base available for the Child and Dependent Care Credit. If you have one child, the credit base is $3,000 — after the $5,000 FSA, there is no remaining base for the credit. With two or more children, the credit base is $6,000 — after the $5,000 FSA, $1,000 remains eligible for the credit.
Dependent Care FSAs are "use it or lose it" — unused funds at the end of the plan year are forfeited. Unlike Health FSAs, there is no $640 rollover option. Some employers offer a 2.5-month grace period. Carefully estimate your annual childcare costs before electing your contribution amount.
Yes — payments to a nanny, au pair, or in-home caregiver for a qualifying dependent qualify for the Dependent Care FSA. However, you must report the caregiver's Social Security number on your tax return, and if you pay a household employee more than $2,800/year (2026), you may have "nanny tax" obligations (employer FICA, unemployment insurance).
Deduct education expenses that maintain or improve skills required in your current trade or business, including courses, books, subscriptions, and professional conferences.
Spending $5,000 on courses, conferences, and books deducts the full amount, saving $1,850 at a 37% rate.
W-2 employees lost this deduction in 2018. Self-employed individuals still have full access. Includes online courses, coaching, masterminds, and professional subscriptions.
A UNK client — a licensed real estate agent — was paying $700/month for a sales coaching program and $1,800/year for CE courses required to maintain her license. She had been treating these as personal expenses. Uncle Kam documented that both qualified as ordinary and necessary business expenses under IRC Section 162: the coaching directly improved her existing skills as an agent, and the CE courses were required to maintain her professional license. The $8,400 annual deduction saved her $3,108 at her 37% rate.
Paying for courses, coaching, or certifications? These are likely deductible. Book a call to make sure you're capturing every education write-off.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallYes, if the education maintains or improves skills required in your current trade or business, or is required by your employer or by law to keep your current job. You cannot deduct education that qualifies you for a new career or meets the minimum requirements for your current job. For self-employed individuals, qualifying education is deducted on Schedule C as a business expense.
It depends. An MBA is deductible if you are already working in a business management role and the degree improves your existing skills — not if it qualifies you for a new career. The IRS looks at whether the education maintains or improves skills in your current work, not whether it is useful. Many MBA students in management roles can deduct tuition; those switching careers cannot.
The business education deduction (Schedule C) has no dollar limit and reduces both income tax and self-employment tax. The Lifetime Learning Credit is a non-refundable credit worth up to $2,000 per year but phases out at higher incomes. Self-employed individuals with qualifying education expenses almost always benefit more from the Schedule C deduction than the LLC.
Yes, if the course or coaching program maintains or improves skills in your current business. A business coach, sales training program, marketing course, or industry certification all qualify. The key test is whether the education relates to your existing work — not whether it is delivered online or in person.
Yes. Books, trade publications, professional journals, and online subscriptions (such as industry databases, software training platforms, or professional newsletters) that are ordinary and necessary for your business are fully deductible on Schedule C. Keep receipts and document the business purpose for each.
A tax credit of up to $2,000 per qualifying child under age 17, with up to $1,700 refundable as the Additional Child Tax Credit.
A family with 3 qualifying children receives $6,000 in child tax credits, directly reducing taxes owed dollar-for-dollar.
The credit phases out at $50 per $1,000 of income above the threshold. The refundable portion (ACTC) can generate a refund even with no tax liability.
A UNK client — a married couple with two children under 17 — had been filing their own taxes and consistently missing the full Child Tax Credit. Their AGI of $195,000 put them just above the phase-out threshold they thought disqualified them entirely. Uncle Kam showed them that the phase-out is gradual: at $195,000 (MFJ), they still qualified for $3,000 per child ($6,000 total). By also contributing $10,000 to a 529 plan (reducing their state taxable income) and maximizing their 401(k) contributions, they reduced their AGI to $165,000 — well within the full credit range.
Have kids under 17? Make sure you're capturing every dollar of the Child Tax Credit. Book a call to review your eligibility.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallThe Child Tax Credit is $2,000 per qualifying child under age 17 in 2026, permanently extended under the OBBBA. Up to $1,700 of the credit is refundable (the Additional Child Tax Credit) for taxpayers with earned income above $2,500. The credit begins to phase out at $200,000 AGI for single filers and $400,000 for married filing jointly, reducing by $50 for every $1,000 of income above the threshold.
The child must be under age 17 at the end of the tax year, a U.S. citizen or resident, claimed as your dependent, and have lived with you for more than half the year. The child must also have a valid Social Security number. There is no limit on the number of qualifying children you can claim.
Yes — up to $1,700 of the $2,000 credit is refundable as the Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC). If your tax liability is less than the credit amount, you can receive the refundable portion as a cash refund. The refundable amount is calculated as 15% of earned income above $2,500, up to the $1,700 limit per child.
The credit phases out by $50 for every $1,000 (or fraction thereof) of AGI above $200,000 (single) or $400,000 (MFJ). At $440,000 MFJ, the credit is fully phased out for two children. Reducing AGI through retirement contributions, HSA contributions, or business deductions can preserve or increase the credit.
Yes — these are two separate credits. The Child Tax Credit ($2,000/child) is based on having a qualifying child under 17. The Child and Dependent Care Credit (up to $1,050 for one child, $2,100 for two or more) is based on childcare expenses paid so you can work. Both can be claimed in the same year for the same child.
Deduct up to $2,500 in interest paid on qualified student loans as an above-the-line deduction, reducing AGI without needing to itemize.
Paying $2,500 in student loan interest saves $550 at a 22% rate — or $925 at a 37% rate.
Phases out gradually above income thresholds (inflation-adjusted annually). Employer student loan repayment assistance up to $5,250 is tax-free through 2025; confirm 2026 status.
A UNK client — a 28-year-old software engineer earning $78,000 — was paying $4,200/year in student loan interest on $65,000 in federal loans. He had no idea the interest was deductible. Uncle Kam confirmed he qualified for the full $2,500 above-the-line deduction (his income was below the $80,000 single phase-out threshold) and filed an amended return for the prior year to capture the missed deduction. The $2,500 deduction reduced his AGI by $2,500, saving $550 in federal taxes and improving his eligibility for other income-based benefits.
Paying student loan interest? Make sure you're taking the deduction. Book a call to review your return.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallYou can deduct up to $2,500 in student loan interest per year as an above-the-line deduction (you do not need to itemize). The deduction phases out between approximately $80,000 and $95,000 AGI for single filers, and between $160,000 and $190,000 for married filing jointly in 2026. The deduction reduces your AGI, which can improve eligibility for other tax benefits.
No — the student loan interest deduction is an above-the-line deduction claimed on Schedule 1, which reduces your AGI regardless of whether you take the standard deduction or itemize. This makes it available to virtually all qualifying borrowers.
If your parents paid your student loan interest and you are claimed as their dependent, neither you nor your parents can deduct the interest. However, if your parents paid the interest but you are not their dependent, you can deduct it as if you paid it yourself — the IRS treats this as a gift from your parents to you, which you then used to pay the loan.
The loan must have been taken out solely to pay qualified higher education expenses (tuition, fees, room and board, books, supplies) for you, your spouse, or a dependent. Both federal and private student loans qualify. Loans from family members or employer plans generally do not qualify.
Yes — you can deduct the interest portion of your payments regardless of which repayment plan you are on. Your loan servicer will send you Form 1098-E each year showing the total interest paid. Even if your payments are low under an income-driven plan, any interest you do pay is deductible up to the $2,500 limit.
Sell investments at a loss to offset capital gains from other investments, reducing or eliminating capital gains tax. Excess losses offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income annually.
Harvesting $50,000 in losses offsets $50,000 in capital gains, saving $10,000 at a 20% long-term rate. Excess losses carry forward indefinitely.
Avoid the wash sale rule — do not buy the same or substantially identical security within 30 days before or after the sale. Replace with a similar (not identical) investment.
A UNK client had a concentrated stock portfolio and realized $85,000 in capital gains from selling a position in early 2023. Later that year, during a market correction, several of his other holdings were down significantly. Uncle Kam identified $55,000 in unrealized losses across three positions. The client sold those positions, harvested the $55,000 in losses, and immediately reinvested in similar (but not identical) ETFs to maintain market exposure without triggering the wash-sale rule. The $55,000 in losses offset $55,000 of his gains, reducing his net capital gain to $30,000.
Have unrealized losses in your portfolio? Tax-loss harvesting is a free tax reduction available every year. Book a call before year-end.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallTax-loss harvesting is the practice of selling investments at a loss to offset capital gains from other investments, reducing your overall tax liability. The harvested losses first offset capital gains dollar-for-dollar. If losses exceed gains, up to $3,000 of excess losses can offset ordinary income per year. Remaining losses carry forward indefinitely to future years.
The wash-sale rule disallows a loss deduction if you buy the same or "substantially identical" security within 30 days before or after the sale. To avoid triggering the rule, you can immediately reinvest in a similar but not identical security (e.g., sell a Vanguard S&P 500 ETF and buy a Fidelity S&P 500 ETF), wait 31 days before repurchasing, or use the loss to rebalance your portfolio.
No — losses in tax-deferred accounts (IRA, 401(k)) cannot be harvested because all gains and losses inside those accounts are tax-deferred. Tax-loss harvesting only applies to taxable brokerage accounts. This is one reason why it can be beneficial to hold more volatile assets in taxable accounts where losses can be harvested.
Yes — and cryptocurrency has a significant advantage: the wash-sale rule does not currently apply to crypto (it applies only to "securities" under the tax code, and crypto is classified as property). This means you can sell crypto at a loss, immediately repurchase the same coin, and still claim the loss deduction. This may change with future legislation.
Capital losses first offset capital gains of the same type (short-term losses offset short-term gains; long-term losses offset long-term gains). Excess losses can offset gains of the other type. After offsetting all capital gains, up to $3,000 of net capital losses can offset ordinary income per year. Remaining losses carry forward indefinitely.
Homeowners installing solar panels, solar water heaters, or battery storage systems may receive a 30% federal tax credit on the total installation cost. Note: the OBBBA (July 2025) restricted or phased out certain clean energy credits — verify current eligibility with a tax advisor.
A $30,000 solar installation (if still qualifying) generates a $9,000 federal tax credit, directly reducing taxes owed dollar-for-dollar.
The OBBBA (signed July 4, 2025) restricted several clean energy credits. The §25D residential solar credit status should be confirmed with a tax advisor for your specific installation date and system type. Battery storage may have different treatment.
A UNK client installed a $35,000 solar panel system on his primary residence. Uncle Kam confirmed he qualified for the full 30% Residential Clean Energy Credit — a $10,500 non-refundable credit against his federal tax liability. Because his tax liability was $14,000, he was able to use the full $10,500 credit in the current year. Uncle Kam also identified an additional $1,200 credit for an upgraded electrical panel required for the installation.
Installing solar or making energy upgrades? The 30% federal credit is available through 2032. Book a call to maximize your energy tax credits.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallThe Residential Clean Energy Credit (formerly the Investment Tax Credit) allows homeowners to claim 30% of the cost of a solar panel system as a federal tax credit. The 30% rate applies to systems installed through 2032, stepping down to 26% in 2033 and 22% in 2034. The credit covers the cost of panels, inverters, mounting hardware, wiring, and installation labor.
No — the Residential Clean Energy Credit is non-refundable, meaning it can reduce your tax liability to zero but cannot generate a refund. However, any unused credit carries forward to future tax years indefinitely until fully used. If your tax liability is less than the credit amount, you will use the remainder in subsequent years.
The Residential Clean Energy Credit applies to your primary or secondary residence. For rental properties, the Investment Tax Credit (ITC) applies instead, which also provides a 30% credit but is claimed as a business credit. Rental property solar installations can also be depreciated, generating additional deductions beyond the credit.
In addition to solar, the Residential Clean Energy Credit covers wind turbines, geothermal heat pumps, battery storage systems (10 kWh minimum), and fuel cells. The Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (25C) provides separate credits for insulation, windows, doors, heat pumps, and electric panel upgrades — up to $3,200/year.
Yes — standalone battery storage systems with a capacity of at least 10 kWh qualify for the 30% Residential Clean Energy Credit starting in 2023, even if not paired with solar panels. This is a significant expansion from prior law, which required battery storage to be charged by solar to qualify.
The federal EV tax credit (§30D) for consumer vehicles was expired by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed July 4, 2025. Business vehicles may still qualify for Section 179 and 100% bonus depreciation deductions regardless of EV status.
A business owner purchasing a $60,000 electric SUV (6,000+ lbs) can still fully expense it under 100% bonus depreciation, saving $22,200 at 37% — regardless of EV credit status.
The OBBBA expired the §30D consumer EV credit. However, business vehicle deductions (Section 179, 100% bonus depreciation) remain fully available for EVs used in business. The vehicle deduction strategy is often more valuable than the credit was.
A UNK client purchased a $68,000 Tesla Model Y for business use in 2026. Uncle Kam confirmed the vehicle qualified for the full $7,500 Commercial Clean Vehicle Credit (Form 8936) for business use. Additionally, because the vehicle was used more than 50% for business and had a GVWR over 6,000 lbs, it qualified for Section 179 expensing — allowing the client to deduct the full $68,000 purchase price in Year 1. Combined with the $7,500 credit, the effective after-tax cost of the vehicle was reduced by $32,660 (at the 37% rate on the $68,000 deduction plus the $7,500 credit).
Buying a vehicle for business use? An EV may qualify for both a $7,500 credit and full expensing. Book a call before you buy.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallThe personal Clean Vehicle Credit (§30D) for new EVs was repealed under the OBBBA for vehicles purchased after December 31, 2025. However, the Commercial Clean Vehicle Credit (§45W, Form 8936) for business-use EVs remains available at up to $7,500 for vehicles under 14,000 lbs. If you are buying an EV for business use, the commercial credit still applies. Book a call to confirm eligibility for your specific vehicle and use case.
To qualify for the full $7,500 credit, the vehicle must be a new plug-in electric vehicle with a battery capacity of at least 7 kWh, have a final assembly in North America, meet critical mineral and battery component sourcing requirements, and fall within MSRP limits ($55,000 for cars, $80,000 for SUVs and trucks). The IRS maintains a current list of qualifying vehicles at fueleconomy.gov.
Yes — starting in 2024, you can transfer the Clean Vehicle Credit to the dealer at the point of sale, effectively receiving the credit as a discount on the purchase price. This is beneficial if your tax liability is less than $7,500 or if you want the benefit immediately rather than waiting until you file your return. The dealer then claims the credit from the IRS.
Businesses can claim the Commercial Clean Vehicle Credit (Form 8936) for EVs used in business, which provides up to $7,500 for vehicles under 14,000 lbs GVWR and up to $40,000 for larger commercial vehicles. Unlike the personal credit, the commercial credit has no income limits and no MSRP caps. Businesses can also combine the credit with Section 179 expensing and bonus depreciation.
The personal Clean Vehicle Credit is non-refundable — it can reduce your tax liability to zero but cannot generate a refund. However, if you transfer the credit to the dealer at purchase, you receive the full benefit regardless of your tax liability. The Commercial Clean Vehicle Credit for businesses is also non-refundable but can be carried back 1 year or forward 20 years.
Receive a 30% tax credit (up to $3,200 per year) for qualifying energy-efficient home improvements including insulation, windows, doors, heat pumps, and HVAC systems.
Installing a $15,000 heat pump generates a $2,000 tax credit. Adding $5,000 in insulation and windows adds $1,200 more — $3,200 total in direct credits.
The $3,200 annual limit resets each year — spread improvements across multiple years to maximize credits. Keep manufacturer certifications.
A UNK client replaced her aging HVAC system with a qualifying heat pump ($8,000) and upgraded her windows and doors ($6,500) in 2026. Uncle Kam confirmed both qualified for the Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (25C): the heat pump qualified for a 30% credit up to the $2,000 annual limit; the windows and doors qualified for 30% up to the $600 and $500 limits respectively. Total credits: $2,000 (heat pump) + $600 (windows) + $500 (doors) = $3,100. The client also qualified for a $150 credit for an energy audit she had done before the project.
Upgrading your home's energy systems? The 25C credit resets every year through 2032. Book a call to plan your upgrades for maximum credits.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallThe Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (Section 25C) provides a 30% credit for qualifying energy efficiency improvements to your primary residence. The annual credit limit is $3,200 total, with sub-limits: $2,000 for heat pumps and biomass stoves, $1,200 for insulation, windows, doors, and energy audits (with further per-item limits). The credit resets each year through 2032.
Qualifying improvements include: heat pumps (air-source and geothermal), heat pump water heaters, biomass stoves and boilers, exterior windows and skylights (must meet Energy Star Most Efficient criteria), exterior doors (must meet Energy Star requirements), insulation and air sealing materials, and home energy audits. Central air conditioners and gas furnaces may also qualify if they meet efficiency thresholds.
Yes — unlike the old Nonbusiness Energy Property Credit which had a lifetime limit, the new Section 25C credit has an annual limit that resets each year. You can claim up to $3,200 in credits per year through 2032, allowing you to spread energy upgrades across multiple years and maximize the total credits claimed.
No — the Section 25C credit applies only to your primary residence. Rental properties do not qualify for this credit. However, energy efficiency improvements to rental properties can be depreciated as capital improvements, and in some cases may qualify for bonus depreciation or Section 179 expensing if the property is used in a trade or business.
Yes — the Section 25C (Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit) and the Section 25D (Residential Clean Energy Credit for solar) are separate credits with separate limits. You can claim both in the same year. For example, installing solar ($10,500 credit) and a heat pump ($2,000 credit) in the same year would generate $12,500 in total federal tax credits.
A sole proprietor or single-member LLC can hire their children under 18 and pay them wages up to the standard deduction amount ($14,600 in 2025) — the child pays no income tax and the business deducts the full amount.
A business owner in the 37% bracket paying two children $14,600 each: $29,200 in deductions saves $10,804 in federal taxes. Children owe $0 in income tax.
Children under 18 in a parent-owned sole proprietorship are exempt from FICA taxes. Must pay reasonable wages for real work. Document hours, duties, and payments.
A UNK client ran a sole proprietorship and had two teenage children (ages 14 and 16) who helped with social media content, filing, and customer communications. He had never paid them formally. Uncle Kam set up a proper employment arrangement: each child was paid $13,000/year (below the 2026 standard deduction of $15,750) for documented work. The $26,000 in wages was deducted from the business (saving $9,620 at the 37% rate) and the children paid zero federal income tax. Because the business was a sole proprietorship, wages paid to children under 18 are also exempt from FICA taxes.
Have kids who help in your business? Paying them properly is one of the most powerful family tax strategies available. Book a call to set it up correctly.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallYes — if your children perform genuine, documented work for your business, you can pay them a reasonable wage and deduct it as a business expense. The work must be real (not fabricated), the compensation must be reasonable for the work performed, and you must follow proper payroll procedures. Children as young as 7 or 8 can perform legitimate tasks like filing, cleaning, modeling for product photos, or helping with social media.
It depends on the business structure. For a sole proprietorship or single-member LLC (disregarded entity), wages paid to children under 18 are exempt from Social Security and Medicare taxes (FICA) and federal unemployment tax (FUTA). For an S-Corp or C-Corp, wages paid to children are subject to FICA taxes regardless of age. This FICA exemption is a significant advantage of operating as a sole proprietorship or partnership when employing children.
In 2026, the standard deduction for a single filer is $15,750. If your child's total earned income is below $15,750, they owe zero federal income tax. Wages from your business count as earned income. Paying each child up to $15,750/year maximizes the deduction for your business while generating zero tax for the child. Income above $15,750 is taxed at the child's rate (typically 10-12%), which is still much lower than your rate.
Yes — children can contribute to a Roth IRA as long as they have earned income. The contribution limit is the lesser of $7,500 (2026) or their total earned income. A child who earns $7,500 working in your business can contribute the full $7,500 to a Roth IRA, where it grows completely tax-free for decades. Starting Roth IRA contributions at age 14 instead of 25 can result in hundreds of thousands of dollars more at retirement due to compounding.
You need: (1) a written job description with specific duties, (2) time records or work logs showing hours worked and tasks completed, (3) payment records (checks or bank transfers — never cash), (4) W-2 issuance at year-end, and (5) evidence that the compensation is reasonable for the work performed. The IRS scrutinizes family employment arrangements, so documentation is critical. Keep records as if you were hiring an unrelated employee.
Executives and highly compensated employees can defer a portion of their compensation to future years, deferring income tax until the funds are received — typically in lower-income retirement years.
Deferring $200,000 in bonus income from a 37% bracket to retirement at a 24% bracket saves $26,000 in taxes on that deferral.
Get the complete MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide on a free strategy call.
Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockA Family Limited Partnership allows transfer of assets to family members at a valuation discount (typically 20–40%) due to lack of control and marketability, reducing estate and gift tax exposure.
A $10M real estate portfolio transferred via FLP at a 35% discount reduces the taxable estate by $3.5M, saving $1.4M in estate taxes at a 40% rate.
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Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockHire your children or spouse in your business to shift income to lower tax brackets. Children under 18 working for a sole proprietorship or partnership owned by parents are exempt from FICA taxes.
Paying a 16-year-old child $15,750/year (2026 standard deduction): $0 federal income tax for the child, $15,750 deduction for the business, saving $5,828 at a 37% rate.
Get the complete MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide on a free strategy call.
Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockMost taxpayers leave the QBI deduction unclaimed — it reduces taxable income by up to 23% starting 2026 under the OBBBA.
HSA contributions offer a triple tax advantage — deductible, tax-free growth, tax-free withdrawals.
Charitable donations of appreciated stock avoid capital gains AND generate a full fair-market-value deduction.